Plantar fasciitis

Heel pain: causes and common conditions beyond plantar fasciitis

Not all heel pain is plantar fasciitis.

Understanding the spectrum of heel pain conditions helps pharmacists deliver targeted advice, recommend appropriate products, and identify red flags requiring referral.

Common causes of heel pain: how to tell them apart?

Condition

Where is the pain?

Typical features

“Clue” that helps you spot it

Mid-portion Achilles tendinopathy

Tendon, above the heel

Worse with load; stiffness

Tender, thickened tendon; pain with heel raises

Insertional Achilles tendinopathy ± retrocalcaneal bursitis

Back of the heel (insertion)

Worse with shoes or uphill walking

Shoe counter irritation; insertion tenderness

Heel fat pad syndrome

Central plantar heel

Worse on hard floors or barefoot

Deep “bruised” heel pain; less morning first-step pain

Calcaneal stress fracture

Heel bone (often focal)

Progressive pain; may occur at rest or night

Recent load increase; focal bony tenderness

Tarsal tunnel / nerve entrapment

Medial heel → sole

Burning or tingling; worse with standing

Neuropathic pain (tingling, numbness)

Inflammatory enthesitis (SpA)

Achilles or plantar insertions

Morning stiffness; often bilateral

Back pain, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, uveitis

  Heel pain may have mechanical, neurological, or inflammatory causes. For pharmacists, pain location, timing, and associated symptoms offer a practical framework to guide advice and referral 1.

Posterior heel pain: Achilles-related disorders

Achilles tendinopathy is a common cause of posterior heel pain, particularly in running or jumping sports and in middle-aged adults after a recent increase or change in physical activity. Pain is typically localized to the tendon (mid-portion) or its insertion on the calcaneus, worsens with activity, and may be accompanied by morning stiffness 2-4.

 

Insertional Achilles tendinopathy may be worsened by shoe pressure and may coexist with adjacent conditions such as retrocalcaneal bursitis or a Haglund-type prominence. From a pharmacy perspective, relevant advice includes avoiding compressive footwear, temporarily reducing provocative activities, and encouraging referral for exercise-based rehabilitation when symptoms persist 2, 4, 5.

Central plantar heel pain: heel fat pad syndrome

Heel fat pad syndrome (HFPS) is increasingly recognized as a distinct cause of plantar heel pain and may be overlooked when all plantar pain is assumed to be plantar fasciopathy. Patients often describe deep, bruise-like pain in the centre of the heel, often worsened by prolonged standing, barefoot walking, or hard surfaces 6, 7.

Management is primarily mechanical offloading, including cushioned footwear, heel cups, viscoelastic inserts, and activity modification 6.

Calcaneal stress fracture

A calcaneal stress fracture should be considered when heel pain develops after a recent increase in load, such as starting a job with prolonged standing, increasing training volume, or changing to harder walking or running surfaces. Pain may initially occur with activity but can progress to persistent pain, including pain at rest or at night. These injuries are often difficult to diagnose clinically and require medical referral for imaging and appropriate offloading 8, 9.

Neuropathic heel pain: tarsal tunnel and calcaneal nerve entrapment

Neuropathic heel pain should be suspected when patients report burning, tingling, numbness, or shooting pain, sometimes radiating into the sole. Tarsal tunnel syndrome, caused by compression of the tibial nerve, is a recognized cause. Diagnosis is primarily clinical and may be supported by imaging in specialist care 10-12.

Inflammatory and systemic causes: spondyloarthritis (enthesitis)

Heel pain may reflect enthesitis, defined as inflammation at tendon or ligament insertions.

In spondyloarthritis (SpA), enthesitis is a common manifestation, and heel pain is a typical presentation. SpA should be considered in the presence of bilateral heel pain, prolonged morning stiffness, inflammatory back pain, or associated conditions such as psoriasis, uveitis, or inflammatory bowel disease 13, 14.

 

!! When heel pain is reported together with one of these conditions, an underlying inflammatory cause should be kept in mind, and referral is appropriate.

 

 

WHEN TO REFER: RED FLAGS IN HEEL PAIN

 

UrgencyRed flagWhy it matters
🔴 ImmediateInability to bear weight, severe pain after traumaPossible fracture or tendon rupture
🔴 ImmediateSudden posterior heel pain with a “snap”Suspected Achilles rupture
🔴 ImmediateRedness, warmth, swelling ± feverPossible infection
🟠 PromptPain at rest or night painPossible stress fracture
🟠 PromptLocalized bony heel tendernessPossible stress fracture
🟠 PromptBurning pain, tingling, numbnessNerve entrapment or neuropathy
🟠 PromptBilateral heel pain with prolonged morning stiffnessPossible inflammatory disease
🟡 Refer if persistentNo improvement after 6–12 weeks of self-careAlternative diagnosis
🟡 Lower thresholdDiabetes, neuropathy, vascular diseaseHigher risk of complications

 

  1. Koc, T.A., Jr., et al., Heel Pain – Plantar Fasciitis: Revision 2023. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther, 2023. 53(12): p. CPG1-CPG39.
  2. Silbernagel, K.G. and K.M. Crossley, A Proposed Return-to-Sport Program for Patients With Midportion Achilles Tendinopathy: Rationale and Implementation. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther, 2015. 45(11): p. 876-86.
  3. Wilson, J.J. and T.M. Best, Common overuse tendon problems: A review and recommendations for treatment. Am Fam Physician, 2005. 72(5): p. 811-8.
  4. Chen, W., et al., Corrigendum to “Epidemiology of insertional and midportion Achilles tendinopathy in runners: A prospective cohort study” [J Sport Health Sci 13 (2024) 256-263]. J Sport Health Sci, 2026: p. 101122.
  5. Knobloch, K., U. Yoon, and P.M. Vogt, Acute and overuse injuries correlated to hours of training in master running athletes. Foot Ankle Int, 2008. 29(7): p. 671-6.
  6. Chang, A.H., et al., What do we actually know about a common cause of plantar heel pain? A scoping review of heel fat pad syndrome. J Foot Ankle Res, 2022. 15(1): p. 60.
  7. Ricci, V., A.J. Abdulsalam, and L. Ozcakar, From Plantar Fasciitis to Heel Fat Pad Syndrome: Sonographic Kaleidoscope for Heel Pain. Am J Phys Med Rehabil, 2024. 103(11): p. e172-e173.
  8. Warden, S.J., I.S. Davis, and M. Fredericson, Management and prevention of bone stress injuries in long-distance runners. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther, 2014. 44(10): p. 749-65.
  9. Jelpke, E., S. Pattnaik, and G.A. Sidhu, Calcaneus and Traumatic Stress Fracture. J Orthop Case Rep, 2025. 15(9): p. 185-187.
  10. Nelson, S.C., Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome. Clin Podiatr Med Surg, 2021. 38(2): p. 131-141.
  11. Nirenberg, M.S. and R.P. Segura, An Investigation of Common Anatomical Sites of Tibial Nerve Compression in Persons With Clinical Findings of Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome. J Am Podiatr Med Assoc, 2025. 115(6).
  12. Bojovic, M., et al., Overview of nerve entrapment syndromes in the foot and ankle. Int Orthop, 2025. 49(4): p. 853-862.
  13. Sieper, J. and D. Poddubnyy, Axial spondyloarthritis. Lancet, 2017. 390(10089): p. 73-84.
  14. Alito, A., et al., The Effect of Therapeutic Exercise and Local Cryotherapy on Lower Limb Enthesitis in Non-Radiographic Axial Spondyloarthritis: A Case Report. J Pers Med, 2024. 14(10).

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